If you are looking for a kiteboarding helmet some things to keep in mind include:

1. It should fit well and be comforable.2. It should be light and not retain water.3. It should have low drag and an absence of projections that could cause neck injury or inflammation.4. It should have the best padding available and not an excessively soft variety either.5. It should remain well secured and have corrosion resistant fastenings.6. It should have a resilent shell.7. Some riders like ear protection to reduce the odds of an ear drum perforation.

So, good close fit ...

Low drag?
Wonder how it would feel entering head first at speed from a jump gone bad from 20 feet up? Do you want something that will hit the water and load up like bill or visor or something that will cause as little resistance to water as feasible while still providing impact protection against hard objects? Kiteboarders plow in from height not uncommonly at all.
Some guys wear these helmets backwards. Have you ever had a spinning wipeout against water? What was up and down can completely change in rapid succession. There is something to be said for low drag on impact with water for kiteboarding lids. The impact dynamics can be substantially different in other activities for which helmets have been designed such as kayaking.

Do NOT wear helmets that are too large for you or poorly fastened. Too loose a helmet could cause injury just with impact against water.

Excellent padding, shell but man look at all that drag. You don't want to hit water going hard or fast with one of these buckets on. Next, NOT FOR KITEBOARDING.
From: http://www.thebellstore.com/

Good padding, light, well ventilated but more drag out the wazoo. Looks like a pain in the neck for kiteboarding. NOT FOR KITEBOARDING.
From: http://store1.yimg.com/

Another reason for not wearing lids is thinking "it won't happen to me." I hope you are right but I wouldn't bet a great deal on that conclusion. Life can be full of surprises. Some accounts follow, these guys had a lot of skill, experience and time kiteboarding. Sometimes skill just isn't enough even in light wind.

NOTE: If your neck is sensitive a helmet could contribute to inflammation/irritation. Of couse the regular slam in's to water could do this same thing even without a helmet in kiteboarding. If you have a sensitive or injured neck think carefully about kiteboarding in the first place and talk to your doctor.

Give some thought to wearing a good helmet, whenever you ride.

"The wiseman learns from others mistakes, the average man learns from his own mistakes, the village idiot never seems to learn."
- Howdoyouflythisthing

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